House Tyrell
Lords of Highgarden. Wardens of the South. Masters of the most fertile lands in Westeros — and the most dangerous political garden in the realm.
House Tyrell is one of the Great Houses of Westeros, ruling the Reach from their ancestral seat at Highgarden. Sigil: a golden rose on green. Words: Growing Strong. The second wealthiest house in the realm, they command the breadbasket of Westeros, an unrivalled military in numbers, and a tradition of political cunning disguised beneath courtly grace. Their story in Game of Thrones is one of ascent, alliance, and catastrophic destruction.
House Tyrell of Highgarden — Power Behind the Rose
In the crowded constellation of Great Houses of Westeros, House Tyrell occupies a paradoxical throne: the wealthiest lords in the realm, yet historically the most underestimated. Where House Lannister trades in gold and brute dominion, the Tyrells cultivate something more insidious — food, flowers, and the slow patience of a garden that outlasts every storm.
Their seat, Highgarden, sits at the heart of the Reach — the largest, most fertile region in Westeros. Control of the Reach means control of the grain that feeds King’s Landing, the flowers that perfume its courts, and the levies that could dwarf any army. For centuries, House Tyrell understood that power is not seized by force alone but grown, tended, and harvested at exactly the right moment.
In George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire and HBO’s Game of Thrones, the Tyrells arrive as kingmakers — the decisive force that saves the capital during the Battle of the Blackwater — and depart as ash, victims of the very court intrigues they had mastered for generations. Their story is the definitive argument that in Westeros, even the most beautiful rose bears thorns that can turn inward.
Sigil & Words
Golden Rose on a green field. House words: “Growing Strong.” Colors: Green and Gold — reflecting the Reach’s fertile lands and the house’s ambition.
The Tyrells originally rose to prominence not through conquest but administration — stewards of House Gardener, the ancient Kings of the Reach. When Aegon’s Conquest swept away the last Gardener king at the Field of Fire, it was the Tyrells who opened Highgarden’s gates and submitted, earning lordship of the Reach in exchange for pragmatic surrender. This founding act — survival through strategic submission — would define the house’s character for centuries.
The Reach — Domain of House Tyrell
The Reach stretches from the Arbor in the south to the Blackwater Rush in the north, encompassing the most productive agricultural land in all of Westeros. Below is a schematic of the key locations within Tyrell dominion.
● Primary Seat ● Vassal Hold
Schematic representation. Not to exact geographic scale. View full interactive map of the Reach →
Key Members of House Tyrell
From the politically astute matriarch to the Knight of Flowers, the Tyrells assembled one of the most compelling family portraits in the series — each member a different face of the rose.
The shrewdest mind in Westeros, disguised beneath a frail exterior. Olenna engineered alliances, orchestrated assassinations, and outmaneuvered Cersei Lannister for years. Her confession to Jaime — “Tell Cersei. I want her to know it was me.” — ranks among the defining exits in the series.
Explore OlennaBetrothed to Renly, married to Joffrey, and wed to Tommen — Margaery Tyrell pursued the Iron Throne with the discipline of a master strategist. Her mastery of public image and genuine empathy for the smallfolk made her a political force Cersei correctly identified as existential.
Explore MargaeryThe most celebrated tourney knight of his generation, Ser Loras embodied the Tyrell ideal of beauty as a weapon. His relationship with Renly Baratheon set events in motion that shaped the War of the Five Kings. His fate in the Great Sept sealed the house’s destruction.
Explore LorasThe Lord of Highgarden in the present era, Mace is often played for comedy — pompous, self-congratulatory, and easily manipulated. Yet his position commanded the most powerful military contingent south of the Trident. His bluster masks the structural power of the Reach itself.
Explore MaceMace’s second son and perhaps the most capable warrior in the family. Garlan led the Tyrell-Lannister relief force at the Battle of the Blackwater, his charge breaking Stannis Baratheon’s assault and arguably deciding the entire war.
Explore GarlanWife of Mace Tyrell and daughter of the Lord of Oldtown, Lady Alerie represents the deep alliance between Highgarden and the Hightowers — two of the oldest and most powerful dynasties in the Reach, whose combined influence dominated southern Westeros.
Explore AlerieThe most militarily gifted house in the Reach, led by the fearsome Randyll Tarly — widely considered the finest battlefield commander in Westeros. The Tarlys represent the sword arm behind Tyrell political ambition, and their betrayal of the Tyrell cause late in the story is a devastating blow.
Explore House TarlyLords of the Arbor, House Redwyne commands the largest naval fleet in Westeros. Paxter Redwyne’s Arbor fleet is the maritime extension of Tyrell power, capable of controlling the southwestern seas and threatening any coastal enemy.
Explore House RedwyneA rival claimant to Highgarden’s power, the Florents pressed an ancient claim to rule the Reach. Their alliance with Stannis Baratheon — through Selyse Florent — placed them in direct opposition to the Tyrells, culminating in their near-total destruction.
Explore House FlorentThe Reach — Political, Geographic & Strategic Zones
The Reach is not a monolithic domain. Tyrell power is exercised across distinct geographic and political clusters, each with its own strategic significance.
Political Zones
Geographic Zones
Strategic & Cultural Zones
House Tyrell — Complete Reference Table
A structured overview of key locations, figures, and strategic assets associated with House Tyrell and the Reach.
| Name | Type | Position / Role | Known For | Strategic Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Highgarden | Castle / Seat | Ancestral seat, heart of the Reach | Beauty, wealth, gardens, impregnability | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Supreme |
| Olenna Tyrell | Character | Matriarch, Queen of Thorns | Poisoning Joffrey, political mastery, sharp wit | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Kingmaker |
| Margaery Tyrell | Character | Three-time queen, political operative | Courting public love, outmaneuvering Cersei | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Throne-seeker |
| Oldtown | City | Oldest city; Citadel and Faith seat | Maesters, religion, scholarship, Hightowers | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Influence hub |
| The Arbor | Island | Wine-producing island, naval base | Finest wine in Westeros, Redwyne fleet | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Naval supremacy |
| House Tarly | Vassal House | Primary military house, Horn Hill | Randyll Tarly — best battlefield commander | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Military arm |
| Loras Tyrell | Character | Ser, Knight of Flowers | Tourney champion, Renly’s relationship | ⭐⭐⭐ — Symbolic + military |
| Roseroad | Trade Route | Highgarden to King’s Landing | Grain and supply corridor to the capital | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Logistical control |
| Mace Tyrell | Character | Lord of Highgarden | Nominal lord; pomposity concealing real power | ⭐⭐⭐ — Structural authority |
House Tyrell — Questions & Answers
The most searched questions about House Tyrell, answered with lore accuracy.
House Tyrell is one of the Great Houses of Westeros, ruling the Reach — the most fertile and populous region in the Seven Kingdoms — from their ancestral seat at Highgarden. They bear the sigil of a golden rose on a green field, and their words are “Growing Strong.” The second wealthiest house after the Lannisters, the Tyrells serve as the defining political and military force of southwestern Westeros throughout the events of A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones.
Highgarden is located in the Reach, in the southwestern portion of Westeros, on the banks of the Mander river. It sits inland from the western coast, roughly equidistant between Oldtown to the south and King’s Landing to the northeast via the Roseroad. Geographically, it commands the most agriculturally productive valley in the continent. See the full map of the Reach →
Yes. It was Olenna Tyrell, in collaboration with Petyr Baelish (Littlefinger). Olenna poisoned King Joffrey at his own wedding feast — the Purple Wedding — slipping the poison into his wine via a gem in Sansa Stark’s necklace. This was confirmed in Season 4 of Game of Thrones when Olenna confesses to Jaime Lannister, famously delivering one of the series’ most celebrated lines. Her motive was to protect Margaery from a lifetime married to a monster.
After the death of Renly Baratheon — whom Margaery had married — House Tyrell needed a new path to the throne. The Lannister offer of Margaery’s betrothal to King Joffrey provided exactly that. Militarily, the Lannister-Tyrell alliance was decisive at the Battle of the Blackwater, where Tyrell forces broke Stannis Baratheon’s assault on King’s Landing. It was a marriage of convenience: Lannisters gained the Reach’s food and soldiers; Tyrells gained proximity to the Iron Throne.
House Tyrell meets its end in Season 6. Cersei Lannister, facing trial by the Faith Militant, detonates a massive cache of wildfire beneath the Great Sept of Baelor — killing Mace Tyrell, Loras Tyrell, and Margaery Tyrell in a single catastrophic act. Olenna Tyrell, the last significant survivor, alliances with Daenerys Targaryen and is later killed by Jaime Lannister at Highgarden. With her death, the main Tyrell line is extinguished. In the books, as of the most recent publication, the house’s fate remains in flux.
House Tyrell was the second wealthiest Great House, behind House Lannister. However, while Lannister wealth came from gold mines, Tyrell wealth came from land — agricultural output, grain, and the commercial productivity of the Reach. This distinction matters: land-based wealth is arguably more durable, and the Tyrells had access to food, the most fundamental form of political leverage. Some argue that if Lannister gold mines were played out, as hinted in the books, the Tyrells’ agricultural empire represented the more sustainable foundation of power.
Before Aegon’s Conquest, the Tyrells were stewards — not kings — serving House Gardener, the ancient rulers of the Reach. When Aegon and his dragons destroyed the Gardeners at the Field of Fire (the only battle where all three dragons were deployed together), Harlen Tyrell surrendered Highgarden and submitted to Aegon. In return, Aegon granted the Tyrells lordship of the Reach. This origin — power earned through submission rather than defiance — shaped the family’s pragmatic, courtly approach to politics for the next three centuries.
Related Maps, Houses & Lore
Navigate the full topical network surrounding House Tyrell and the Reach.
The Reach is vast. The lore runs deeper than any garden. Where will you venture next?
